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Stephen S. Roach, former Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia and the firm's chief economist, is a senior fellow at Yale University's Jackson Institute of Global Affairs and a senior lecturer at Yale's School of Management. He is the author of Unbalanced: The Codependency of America and China.

Paul Jefferson has actually given the answer, but at the very end. Renminbi appreciation does not help the American business partners who source cheap goods into U.S. which is equivalent of importing labor and exporting capital goods, which the Chinese buy. It would actually benefit the Chinese a little bit if the Renminbi appreciates.

The CCER study showed that 44 percent of the Chinese trade surplus was contributed by U.S. companies operating in China, and 20 percent by other foreign companies there.

CCR study showed that if we take iPhone, a personal electronic device designed by the U.S. Apple Inc. as an example. The product, assembled in China, alone accounted for 1.9 billion dollars of China's trade surplus with the United States in 2009.

CCER study showed that most of China's trade with the U.S. is compensation trade, which may account for 60 percent of the total (bilateral) trade. The yuan's appreciation may somewhat increase China's trade surplus, contrary to the common sense.

It means China can import raw materials and equipment at relatively low prices.

Even if China is forced to give up exporting some of its products once the yuan appreciates, the United States will still have to buy those products, which it usually does not manufacture, from other countries -- which neither helps bring down its trade deficit nor create jobs.

According to a CCER model co-developed with a U.S. institution, if the yuan appreciates by 5 percent against the dollar, the U.S. employment rate will rise by only 0.03 percent; even if the yuan appreciates by 20 percent, it only helps to raise U.S. employment by 0.16 percent.

The effects of the yuan's appreciation on stimulating consumption are even smaller. According to the model, U.S. consumption will be up a mere 0.02 percent, given a 5-percent appreciation of the Chinese currency against the dollar.

Meanwhile, the model showed that the increase in the yuan's value is unlikely to affect the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) much -- if the yuan rises by 5 percent, the U.S. GDP would go up 0.02 percent, while China's GDP would contract 0.56 percent.

We could do some sensitivities with the modeling, but the truth will not be any far. If renminbi appreciates significantly, the Chinese foreign exchange reserves at $3 Trillion poses a significant challenge to both the nations, it could be either way a situation to make new adjustments.

There must be some advantage for China in keeping its currency low. Otherwise, China's leaders would not be so stubbornly persistent in depressing the value of the yuan.

Obviously, China's artificially low currency gives them a price advantage in international trade. This allows them to penetrate and dominate foreign markets.

Conversely, the low yuan is an obstacle for any USA-based manufacturer who wants to sell to China. USA-made goods are typically too expensive, partly because China's currency is held at an artificially low level.

Similarly, the low yuan has made China's labor costs so cheap that American workers cannot compete. Consequently, many are unemployed or underemployed. Yet the author believes these financially stressed individuals can be persuaded to save more. How?

The advantage of a low currency is clear: China enjoys an 8% growth rate, versus a quarter of that in the USA. And China's dictators want a low yuan to help them retain their grip on power, by keeping Chinese workers employed, thereby avoiding economic discontent.

Clearly, China has strong motivation to depress the yuan's value, which is why they still do it. The 31% appreciation the author referred to is not recent. In fact, the yuan has been held in a tight range for the past several years.

Anyway, why would the author consider 31% to be sufficient? Is this number based on purchasing power parity? Or on an interim target set by a USA politician long ago? Why not just allow the currency to float freely, and let the market decide?

Other excuses offered by the author for China are equally suspect. He states that "the endgame is a market-based, fully convertible renminbi". However, what we are actually witnessing indicates that China's real endgame is to dominate the world economy. They intend to become the new imperial, dictatorial master of the world.

The author also states that "China has had an open development model, with imports running at 28% of GDP". But what did those imports consist of? Oil? Raw natural resources? From where? If this is such a significant statistic, then the author should break out the components to reveal the true story.

Finally, the author advises that "the US should reconsider antiquated Cold War restrictions on Chinese purchases of technology-intensive items." In other words, the USA should concede defeat, and surrender their last major technology advantage. After all, the US cannot defeat North Korea, because China will not allow any meddling with their puppet. And the US cannot prevent China from stealing US technology and selling it to Iran. Resistance is futile, the author seems to say, so let's just surrender now.

This is not to imply that the USA should base its economy on weapons technology. But sadly, that is one of the few remaining areas of competitive advantage left. This is after years of assault on the USA economy by nations such as China, who have manipulated their currencies for their advantage, at America's expense.

But the real threat to the USA is not China! Instead, it is wealthy Americans whose loyalty is not to their own country, but to themselves and to trans national corporations. China's unfair cost advantage only makes these individuals and corporations richer. And if America collapses, they can afford to move to Singapore or Shanghai.

Who can we trust to save America and the world from centuries of domination by the fascist dictatorship that is China? Not the 1% protesters, whose goals are vague, and whose strategies are ineffectual. Not Obama, who has squandered every opportunity to resist currency manipulators such as China. And not Romney, who is beholden to the ultra rich.

In response to Paul Jefferson's claim about the increase in the value of the Chinese yuan, my computation of its increase over the past two years, from the chart whose link he supplied, is a 0.3% increase, or slightly more than 0.1% per year